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MACKAY SILVER COLLECTION

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John W. Mackay (1831-1902) commissioned Tiffany and Company of New York to design and produce a silver service for his wife Marie-Louise.  The result was a unique 1250 piece set of sterling silver dinner and dessert service for twenty-four completed in 1878.  Charles Grosjean of Tiffany designed the service and Edward C. Moore supervised the project.  Charles Carpenter in his volume “Tiffany Silver” notes that as the largest, the grandest, the most elegantly ornate and most famous set of its time, the Mackay service epitomized the sumptuous dining table of Victorian America.

 Mr. Mackay, the so-called “silver king” for his success in developing the fabled Comstock Lode in Virginia City (which made him one of the wealthiest men in the country) shipped in 1877 approximately one-half ton of silver from his mines to Tiffany in New York.  There, reportedly, two hundred craftsmen worked exclusively on the service for two year; a total of over one million man hours.  When complete, Mr. Mackay purchased the dies so that the service could never be duplicated.  The service was delivered to the Mackays in Paris, accompanied by a silver clasped leather bound album of photographs and fitted in nine walnut and mahogany chests, each mounted with a silver plaque detailing its contents.

 Each piece of the service was individually decorated by hand in rich floriated designs including repetitions of the Irish Shamrock, the Scottish thistle, American garden and wild flowers.  The designs had their origins in the dense overall decoration of Near Eastern metalwork.  Referring to Persia and Mogul India, Tiffany called the design of the whole service “Indian.”  Remarkable as an example of the silversmith’s crafts and as a statement of high Victorian taste, the Mackay service is both an artistic and historic monument.

The W.M. Keck Museum is home to some of the larger silver pieces and can be viewed during normal visiting hours, Monday - Friday, 8am - 4pm.

One of a pair of candelabra, each using 29 candles and standing 36" high. These were the tallest candelabra ever made by Tiffany & Co.

A soup tureen showing the Hungerford family crest, a feature found on every piece of Mackay silver.

Each piece of the Mackay Silver has Marie Louise Mackay's initials, MLM, in intertwined script. You can see the initials on the front of this vegetable dish.

A champagne cooler with a grape and vine motif.

 

One of a pair of oil lamps

This close-up of one of the oil lamps shows the incredible detail that went into producing each piece of silver.   There are more than twenty different flowers on this oil lamp.

 

a small silver plate 8" in diameter

 

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